Frequently Asked FreeBASIC Graphics Library Questions

FreeBASIC

Frequently Asked FreeBASIC Graphics Library Questions
 


FreeBASIC Graphics Library questions:



FreeBASIC Graphics Library questions


How can I link/use Gfxlib?
Gfxlib is "built in" into the language, it is not necessary to include any .bi file or to link any library explicitly. FreeBASIC detects you want to use Gfxlib when you use the Screen or ScreenRes statements. So to use Gfxlib, just start a graphics screen mode and use the graphics commands.

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What about the fbgfx.bi header file?
The fbgfx.bi header file is available for inclusion by your program, and contains constant and type definitions that may be helpful to the programmer when using Gfxlib. You do not have to explicitly include this file to use Gfxlib however; the header is only available as an aid. It contains the constants for the mode flags that can be passed to Screen and ScreenRes, and also definitions of Keyboard scancodes and the fb.Image buffer structure.

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How are Get/Put arrays managed?
In FreeBASIC, images can be used as arrays (as in QB) or as pointers. Either way, the image data is contained in one continuous chunk. The chunk consists of an header followed by the image data. The header can be of two types (old-style and new-style) and determines the format of the following image data, for details see GfxInternalFormats .

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Why is Bsave/Bload crashing?
Bsave/Bload can only be used to load and save graphics screens in FreeBASIC. It can't be used to save a text mode screen. To load and save an array check this snippet using file Get/Put .

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How can I get the red, green, blue, or alpha component of a color?

Each byte in a color attribute corresponds with the red, green, blue, and alpha components. The following example shows how to extract the component values from a 16, 24, or 32 bit color attribute.

#define rgb_a(x) ((x) Shr 24)
#define rgb_r(x) ((x) Shr 16 And 255)
#define rgb_g(x) ((x) Shr 8 And 255)
#define rgb_b(x) ((x) And 255)

Dim As UInteger c
Dim As Integer x, y
Dim As UByte red, green, blue, Alpha

'' Assume a 16, 24, or 32 bit screen mode has been set
c = Point(x, y)
red = rgb_r(c)
green = rgb_g(c)
blue = rgb_b(c)
Alpha = rgb_a(c)


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How can I make the 'x' button in the window header close my application?
In windowed graphics mode you can test for the press of the window's X (close) button with Inkey, checking for the value Chr( 255 ) + "k" (which is also the code returned for Alt+F4). This applies to Win32 and Linux, in DOS there is no "X" button.

Here is a small example:

'' "X" close button example , Win32 and Linux only
Dim As String key
Screen 13
Do
  Print "Click the 'x' to close this app."
  Sleep
  key = Inkey
Loop Until key = Chr(27) Or key = Chr(255, 107) 'escape or x-button


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Can't run programs using Screen 13 or 14 in full-screen!
It's a hardware/driver limitation (Win32 and Linux only?). Video cards don't implement those low resolution graphic modes nowadays. If full-screen is required you should rewrite it using at least Screen 17 or 18, or a resolution of 640x480 or higher to be sure modern hardware can handle it.

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Why does Imagecreate return a NULL pointer?
ImageCreate needs to create an image buffer that fits the current screen's pixel format, and it cannot do so if there is no screen mode setup yet, so it returns NULL, very likely resulting in a NULL pointer access later on that crashes the program.

This is known to happen when Imagecreate is called before the graphics library was initialized with a call to Screen or ScreenRes, as may happen when Imagecreate is called in a global constructor that is invoked before the Screen or Screenres call in the main part of the program. In such a case it is necessary to move the screen initialization into a constructor too, and have it execute before the image-creating constructors.

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See also